Melody Lane (1929 film)

Melody Lane
Directed byRobert F. Hill
Written byJ.G. Hawks
Robert F. Hill
Tom Reed
Based onThe Understander
by Jo Swerling
StarringEddie Leonard
Josephine Dunn
Rose Coe
CinematographyJoseph Brotherton
Edited byDaniel Mandell
Distributed byUniversal Pictures
Release date
  • July 21, 1929 (1929-07-21)
Running time
76 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$30,000

Melody Lane is a 1929 black and white American musical film directed by Robert F. Hill. It is an adaption to the play The Understander written by Jo Swerling.[1][2]

Plot

This story follows a songwriter, Des Dupree, who joins the U.S Army in France, leaving behind his Chorus Girl Sweetheart. During his time in the Army, he falls in love with a French singer. Des is injured in action and his chorus girl eventually leaves him. His French singer can't seem to forget about him, so she follows him back to the states where the two are reunited and he is cured of his injury


Cast

Soundtrack

  • "ROLY BOLY EYES"
Written by Eddie Leonard
Performed by Eddie Leonard
  • "THE SONG OF THE ISLANDS"
Written by Charles E. King
  • "Here I Am"
Words and Music by Eddie Leonard, Grace Stern, and Jack Stern
Copyright 1929 by Irving Berlin Inc.
  • "There's Sugar-Cane Around My Door"
Words and Music by Eddie Leonard, Grace Stern, and Jack Stern
Copyright 1929 by Irving Berlin Inc.
  • "The Bogey-Man Is Here"
Words and Music by Eddie Leonard, Grace Stern, and Jack Stern
Copyright 1929 by Irving Berlin Inc.
  • "Beautiful"
Words and Music by Eddie Leonard, Grace Stern, and Jack Stern
Copyright 1929 by Irving Berlin Inc.

Production

The production company for this film includes Robert F. Hill as writer and director, Daniel Mandell as editor, and Joseph Brotherton as the cinematographer. Shot at Universal Studios in Universal City, California, the film was released on July 21st, 1929 by Universal Pictures.

Preservation

The film is now incomplete, with a 16mm copy of the last reel of the sound version, an incomplete print of the silent version (5 of the 6 reels) is also in the Library of Congress. An incomplete soundtrack (reels 1, 3, 5, 6, 7 and 8 of 8) also survives in the hands of a private collector.

See also

References